Tuesday, January 18, 2011

TV's New Kid On The Block

The changes continue at SPEED with the network under new management and the push to refocus on racing picking up steam. It's hard to describe the frustration of the past several years as SPEED drifted away from real racing and into reality-style shows. The network called it "lifestyle programming."

SPEED viewers have watched men in Chicago tow trucks, seen Vida Guerra live the SoCal low life, enjoyed fake drag racing with Rich Christensen and even watched amateur talent contests in primetime. Who can forget the bagpiper in the cowboy hat who played "Low Rider?"

Over the past five seasons, we have concentrated on writing about the NASCAR TV slice of the pie. This column will talk about a bit more. There is only one weekly hour on SPEED that covers general motorsports. That show is The SPEED Report (TSR) and it is about to change drastically.

Co-anchored by two of SPEED's stable of in-house announcers, TSR has been hidden in the 7PM Sunday timeslot. This meant no updates on non-NASCAR news on Saturdays and only one shot at information and highlights on Sunday. 7PM Eastern is 4PM Pacific and that was sometimes rough for those dedicated West Coast fans of drag racing and supercross.

The bottom line is that SPEED has needed an expanded studio presence on racing weekends for many years now and that is finally about to happen. On February 13 at 7PM ET, SPEED Center will debut and the multi-year run of TSR will be over.

With NASCAR Live as an established presence on the stock car side, it makes perfect sense to utilize the SPEED studios as a hub for other motorsports news, highlights and information. In the same way that other networks insert studio updates, SPEED can finally begin to awaken from its long slumber and become the network of record where motorsports is concerned.

The idea is that SPEED Center will be a flexible presence on Saturdays and Sundays, providing scheduled updates but also passing along breaking news, providing highlights of other motorsports and keeping viewers up to date on the stories formerly provided online on the SPEED.com website.

There will still be a full one-hour wrap-up show on Sunday nights, but getting the network to move in this direction is fantastic. SPEED provides coverage of everything from sports cars to motorcycles and Formula One. Establishing a SPEED Center franchise will finally bring the network the ability to interact with all kinds of motorsports fans and keep them informed.

There will be more details coming over the next couple of weeks, including pictures of the new set and potential new faces in the line-up. The bottom line is that SPEED will be providing a consistent studio presence for every racing weekend in 2011. That is a wonderful step in the right direction.

We welcome your comments on this topic. To add your opinion, just click on the comments button below. This is a family-friendly website, please keep that in mind when posting. Thanks for taking the time to stop by The Daly Planet.

17 comments:

Stephen
said...

This is great news! Speed is moving in the right direction finally-if you want reality tv you need to make it reality centered around racing-like NBS 24/7 was or hot wired or anything else produced by NMG. The lifestyle shows are annoying. Barrett Jackson is probably the only non-racing show I watch on the network and thats only when its live-not the endless re-runs. Speed was built on live racing-a studio show presence will be great-it would be nice to have a show reminiscent of thursday thunder on espn back in the day-they are in charlotte-it wouldnt cost that much to drag 2 cameras and an announce crew to the Lowes motor speedway small oval or the dirt track for some live short track racing or to bowman gray stadium-youd have a guranteed watcher in me. Either way this is a great and positive step away from whatever the past crap was.

Speed’s credibility is so low that I will not watch Speed Center until it goes live and I read what other Planeteers have to say about it. Nascar Now is so much fluff, so much softball reporting, and so much toeing the nascar line its disgusting. And with all the lifestyle reporting thrown in, why should I believe Speed Center will be any different? For comparison purposes, I will watch Despain’s recap of the racing weekend. I may not agree with everything Despain says, but at least he states what he thinks. Again, sorry to be so negative and I hope Speed Center lives up to your article. MC

Gee, we had TV,Phonograph & AM/FM/Short Wave Radio set that looked just like that. Was a DuMont. I can still remember the cool hmmmmm it made when warming up and how could pick up Radio Moscow.

As for the other news. Well, that's nice, but I really want more from Ms. Wheeler. Am I too greedy? I dunno. What I do know is that I rarely watched TSR so renaming it and making it updateable is to me a yawner. It is good, however, for those that like it.

I just read on SceneDaily that NASCAR is going to change the points system again to a one-point-per-position system.

My TV-related question is: How much do ratings have to drop before the front office wakes up? The sport is losing all credibility. If they do this, ratings will be down another 25-30% and attendance will drop further. It is so sad to watch the sport destroy itself for no good reason.

I'll believe it when I see it. After everything else Speed has done in the past, I tend to be a bit skeptical so I won't be disappointed.

Where's this leave "the old windbag" as Dave DeSpain describes himself?

As to Radio Moscow, I use to listen to them from time to time when I was stationed overseas. They had a better selection and more up-to-date music than did our own Armed Forces Radio and Television Service (AFRTS or as some of us called it "AFARTS").

Yes, short wave. Also got the BBC and I think I remember Radio Luxembourg. But listening to the Commies was much more fun since we thought, being kids, it was something forbidden. Like admitting you knew where your father stashed his Playboys.

I (like many) Really don't watch ANY repeat ANY of that other cr..stuff . Spence is fine & why can't any body get Schrader on there the guys hilarious. Completly agree with the Toe The Nascar Line (FLUFF) & I also have no intrest in being conned by the slanted reporting. Keep Dave Despain

Sounds promising, but not enough to get me to subscribe to a package that offers SPEED.

For me, the signal that management finally understands will be when LeMans 24 coverage isn't interrupted to show NASCAR truck qualifying.

Dave DeSpain has been the best thing on that channel for more than five years. I'll give props to their F1 race coverage as well, but they ignore that portion of the sport for the 165 other hours of the week.

How about some Robin Miller or Schrader? How about THOSE TWO as a team on a show, huh, Huh?

Frankly I won't be happy until they get rid of the loony TWO HOUR RDay & put it back to one hour and give WIND TUNNEL TWO HOURS ON TV. I will not invest 2 hrs of HOME DEPOT adds & stupid loud fans & insipid wavy signs giving me vertigo on tv.

I listen to WT extra but not a replacement. 2 hrs on tv THEN extra online.

WT is the shortest hour on tv w all the commercials.

Once again, SPEED REPORT WAS NOT BROKEN. I thought it was fine the way it was before.

sorry for yelling but I'm so fed up w SPEED, it's pitiful.

Give us more WTunnel.

Give us some Colorful Commentary with Robin Miller & Ken Schrader Something for long time fans in stock & OW.